174 research outputs found

    A 1.2 V and 69 mW 60 GHz Multi-channel Tunable CMOS Receiver Design

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    A multi-channel receiver operating between 56 GHz and 70 GHz for coverage of different 60 GHz bands worldwide is implemented with a 90 nm Complementary Metal-Oxide Semiconductor (CMOS) process. The receiver containing an LNA, a frequency down-conversion mixer and a variable gain amplifier incorporating a band-pass filter is designed and implemented. This integrated receiver is tested at four channels of centre frequencies 58.3 GHz, 60.5 GHz, 62.6 GHz and 64.8 GHz, employing a frequency plan of an 8 GHz-intermediate frequency (IF). The achieved conversion gain by coarse gain control is between 4.8 dB–54.9 dB. The millimeter-wave receiver circuit is biased with a 1.2V supply voltage. The measured power consumption is 69 mW

    Analog/RF Circuit Design Techniques for Nanometerscale IC Technologies

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    CMOS evolution introduces several problems in analog design. Gate-leakage mismatch exceeds conventional matching tolerances requiring active cancellation techniques or alternative architectures. One strategy to deal with the use of lower supply voltages is to operate critical parts at higher supply voltages, by exploiting combinations of thin- and thick-oxide transistors. Alternatively, low voltage circuit techniques are successfully developed. In order to benefit from nanometer scale CMOS technology, more functionality is shifted to the digital domain, including parts of the RF circuits. At the same time, analog control for digital and digital control for analog emerges to deal with current and upcoming imperfections

    Design of Low-Power Transmitter and Receiver Front End

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    This thesis focuses on the design of "RF front-end blocks" for the transmitter and receiver. The blocks include the low noise amplifier (LNA) and mixer downconversion at the receiving side, while the power amplifier includes the pre-driver circuit, and mixer up-conversion at the transmitter side. All of the blocks were designed in a 65nm design kit. The basics of these RF blocks are first described in chapters two to four. After that, the general principle of operations is then described and different topologies are discussed. In chapter 5 the proposed design is discussed. The proposed design is composed of a differential IDCS narrow band LNA, with a passive down-conversion mixer on the receiving side, designed for bluetooth low energy (BLE) applications, that operates at 2.4 GHz with a 1.2 V supply voltage. The overall conversion gain at the receiving side was found to be greater than 13 dB with a double side band noise figure of 8.3 dB having a 1 dB compression point of -11.8 dB, and with IIP3 of -2.06 dBm having a power consumption of 251 ÎĽwatts. On the transmission side, a power amplifier with a pre-driver circuit and a passive up-conversion mixer has been designed to operate at a 1.2 V supply at the frequency of operation 2.4 GHz, having overall gain of 24 dB with maximum power added efficiency of 34% when using maximum output power of 11 dBm. The Cadence virtuoso design kit was used for simulation. Additionally, the layout considerations were discussed, followed by presentation of the post-layout results and graphs, and, finally, some conclusions have been drawn

    Receiver Front-Ends in CMOS with Ultra-Low Power Consumption

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    Historically, research on radio communication has focused on improving range and data rate. In the last decade, however, there has been an increasing demand for low power and low cost radios that can provide connectivity with small devices around us. They should be able to offer basic connectivity with a power consumption low enough to function extended periods of time on a single battery charge, or even energy scavenged from the surroundings. This work is focused on the design of ultra-low power receiver front-ends intended for a receiver operating in the 2.4GHz ISM band, having an active power consumption of 1mW and chip area of 1mm². Low power consumption and small size make it hard to achieve good sensitivity and tolerance to interference. This thesis starts with an introduction to the overall receiver specifications, low power radio and radio standards, front-end and LO generation architectures and building blocks, followed by the four included papers. Paper I demonstrates an inductorless front-end operating at 915MHz, including a frequency divider for quadrature LO generation. An LO generator operating at 2.4GHz is shown in Paper II, enabling a front-end operating above 2GHz. Papers III and IV contain circuits with combined front-end and LO generator operating at or above the full 2.45GHz target frequency. They use VCO and frequency divider topologies that offer efficient operation and low quadrature error. An efficient passive-mixer design with improved suppression of interference, enables an LNA-less design in Paper IV capable of operating without a SAW-filter

    A reconfigurable 60GHz receiver : providing robustness to process variations

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    The problems associated with process-induced variability and other challenges of 60GHz circuit design and measurement are treated in this thesis. A system-level analysis is performed on a generic RF receiver. For doing that, first, bit error rate (BER) is considered as a figure of merit representing the overall performance of the Receiver. Then, each stage of the receiver is described by three parameters: voltage gain, noise, and nonlinearity which are prone to variation due to process spread. The variation of these parameters represents all lower-level sources of variability. Since bit error rate (BER), as a major performance measure of the receiver, is a direct function of the noise and distortion, the contribution of each block to the overall noise plus distortion (NPD) is analyzed, which opens the way for minimization of the sensitivity of the NPD to the performance variation of individual stages. It is shown that the first order sensitivities of NPD to the individual gains of the building blocks can all be made zero. Its second order sensitivity to the gains of the building blocks can be reduced. Its sensitivity to noise and nonlinearity of an individual building block can be reduced, but at the cost of that of other blocks; its sensitivity to noise and nonlinearity cannot be reduced over the whole system. Three design approaches are proposed, analyzed and compared. Statistical and corner simulations are performed to confirm the validity of the proposed guidelines showing significant improvement in the yield of the designs. Applying the analysis to a zero-IF three-stage 60 GHz receiver shows a significant improvement in the design yield, by nullifying the first order sensitivities of the overall performance to the individual gains of the blocks. Reduction of the second order sensitivity of the NPD to the gain of individual stages, by keeping the contribution factor of all the stages below one, results in further improvements in the design yield. The conventional optimum-power design methodology has been modified in a way that it nullifies the first order sensitivities of NPD to the individual gains of all the stages. It is shown that for simultaneous power optimization and reduced second-order sensitivity to the gains of the blocks less power hungry building blocks must be in the rear stages of the receiver and more power hungry ones in the front. After identifying the limitations of a pure system-level approach, i.e., inability to suppress the sensitivity of the overall performance to the noise and nonlinearity of all the blocks, the focus is shifted towards circuit-level methods by providing re-configurability to some RF circuits. A receiver is designed with good noise and nonlinearity performance and with accumulated noise and nonlinearity distortion contribution in its last stage (mixer). As a result, the overall performance of the receiver is more sensitive to the performance variations of the mixer. Simulations show that it is possible to correct the overall receiver performance degradations resulting from process variations by just tuning the performance of the mixer. Furthermore, a tunable mixer is presented for minimizing the IMD2 across a wide IF bandwidth. It is demonstrated both in theory and measurement that a presented three-dimensional tuning method is beneficial for wideband cancellation of second order intermodulation distortions (IMD2) in a zero-IF downconverter. A 60GHz zero-IF mixer is designed and measured on-wafer to show that the proposed tuning mechanism can simultaneously suppress IMD2 tones across the whole 1GHz IF band. To address the challenges of 60GHz circuit design, a design methodology is utilized which serves to properly model the parasitic effects and improve the predictability of the performance. The parasitic effects due to layout, which are more influential at high frequencies, are taken into account by performing automatic RC extraction and manual L extraction. The long signal lines are modeled with distributed RLC networks. The problem of substrate losses is addressed by using patterned ground shields in inductors and transmission lines. The cross-talk issue is treated by using distributed meshed ground lines, decoupled DC lines, and grounded substrate contacts around sensitive RF components. However, in practice, it is observed that accurate simulation of all the effects is sometimes very time consuming or even infeasible. For instance electromagnetic simulation of a transformer in the presence of all the dummy metals is beyond the computational capability of existing EM-simulators. Three 60GHz receiver components are analyzed, designed, and measured with good performance. A two-stage fully integrated 60 GHz differential low noise amplifier is implemented in a CMOS 65 nm bulk technology with superior noise figure compared to state-of-the-art mm-wave LNAs. A doublebalanced 60 GHz mixer with ac-coupled RF input is designed and measured with a series capacitor in the input RF path to suppress the low frequency second order intermodulation distortions generated in the previous stage. A quadrature 60 GHz VCO is presented which exhibits a comparable level of performance, in particular very good phase noise, to state-of-the-art single-phase VCOs, despite the additional challenges and limitations imposed by the quadrature topology. The on-wafer measurements on the 60GHz circuits designed in this work are performed using a waveguide-based measurement setup. The fixed waveguide structures, specially provided for the probe station, serve for the robustness of the setup as they circumvent the need for cables, which are by nature difficult to rigidify, in the vicinity of the probes. Taking advantage of magic- Ts, it is possible to measure differential mm-wave circuits with a two-port network analyzer rather than using a much more expensive four-port one. Noise, s-parameter, and phase noise measurements are performed using the mentioned setups

    Ultra high data rate CMOS front ends

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    The availability of numerous mm-wave frequency bands for wireless communication has motivated the exploration of multi-band and multi-mode integrated components and systems in the main stream CMOS technology. This opportunity has faced the RF designer with the transition between schematic and layout. Modeling the performance of circuits after layout and taking into account the parasitic effects resulting from the layout are two issues that are more important and influential at high frequency design. Performing measurements using on-wafer probing at 60 GHz has its own complexities. The very short wave-length of the signals at mm-wave frequencies makes the measurements very sensitive to the effective length and bending of the interfaces. This paper presents different 60 GHz corner blocks, e.g. Low Noise Amplifier, Zero IF mixer, Phase-Locked Loop, a Dual-Mode Mm-Wave Injection-Locked Frequency Divider and an active transformed power amplifiers implemented in CMOS technologies. These results emphasize the feasibility of the realization 60 GHZ integrated components and systems in the main stream CMOS technology

    Design of injection locked frequency divider in 65nm CMOS technology for mmW applications

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    In this paper, an Injection Locking Frequency Divider (ILFD) in 65 nm RF CMOS Technology for applications in millimeter-wave (mm-W) band is presented. The proposed circuit achieves 12.69% of locking range without any tuning mechanism and it can cover the entire mm-W band in presence of Process, Voltage and Temperature (PVT) variations by changing the Injection Locking Oscillator (ILO) voltage control. A design methodology flow is proposed for ILFD design and an overview regarding CMOS capabilities and opportunities for mm-W transceiver implementation is also exposed.Postprint (published version

    Ultra high data rate CMOS FEs

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    The availability of numerous mm-wave frequency bands for wireless communication has motived the exploration of multi-band and multi-mode integrated components and systems in the main stream CMOS technology. This opportunity has faced the RF designer with the transition between schematic and layout. Modeling the performance of circuits after layout and taking into account the parasitic effects resulting from the layout are two issues that are more important and influential at high frequency design. Performaning measurements using on-wafer probing at 60GHz has its own complexities. The very short wave-length of the signals at mm-wave frequencies makes the measurements very sensitiv to the effective length and bending of the interfaces. This paper presents different 60GHz corner blocks, e.g. Low Noise Amplifier, Zero IF mixer, Phase-Locked Loop, A Dual-Mode Mm-Wave Injection-Locked Frequency Divider and an active transformed power amplifiers implemented in CMOS technologies. These results emphasize the feasibility of the realization 60GHZ integrated components and systems in the main stream CMOS technology

    Frequency Translation loops for RF filtering-Theory and Design

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    Modern wireless transceivers are required to operate over a wide range of frequencies in order to support the multitude of currently available wireless standards. Wideband operation also enables future systems that aim for better utilization of the available spectrum through dynamic allocation. As such, co-existence problems like harmonic mixing and phase noise become a main concern. In particular, dealing with interfer- ence scenarios is crucial since they directly translate to higher linearity requirements in a receiver. With CMOS driving the consumer electronics market due to low cost and high level of integration demands, the continued increase in speed, mainly intended for digital applications, oers new possibilities for RF design to improve the linearity of front-end receivers. Furthermore, the readily available switches in CMOS have proven to be a viable alternative to traditional active mixers for frequency translation due to their high linearity, low flicker noise, and, most recently recognized, their impedance transformation properties. In this thesis, frequency translation feedback loops employing passive mixers are explored as a means to relax the linearity requirements in a front-end receiver by providing channel selectivity as early as possible in the receiver chain. The proposed receiver architecture employing such loop addresses some of the most common prob- lems of integrated RF lters, while maintaining their inherent tunability. Through a simplied and intuitive analysis, the operation of the receiver is first examined and the design parameters aecting the lter characteristics, such as band- width and stop-band rejection, are determined. A systematic procedure for analyzing the linearity of the receiver reveals the possibility of LNA distortion canceling, which decouples the trade-o between noise, linearity and harmonic radiation. Next, a detailed analysis of frequency translation loops using passive mixers is developed. Only highly simplied analysis of such loops is commonly available in literature. The analysis is based on an iterative procedure to address the complexity introduced by the presence of LO harmonics in the loop and the lack of reverse isolation in the mixers, and results in highly accurate expressions for the harmonic and noise transfer functions of the system. Compared to the alternative of applying general LPTV theory, the procedure developed oers more intuition into the operation of the system and only requires the knowledge of basic Fourier analysis. The solution is shown to be capable of predicting trade-os arising due to harmonic mixing and loop stability requirements, and is therefore useful for both system design and optimization. Finally, as a proof of concept, a chip prototype is designed in a standard 65nm CMOS process. The design occupies +12dBm. As such, the work presented in this thesis aims to provide a highly-integrated means for programmable RF channel selection in wideband receivers. The topic oers several possibilities for further research, either in terms of extending the viability of the system, for example by providing higher order ltering, or by improving performance, such as noise
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